Friday, November 30, 2012

Seniors and Baby boomers Online Dating Guide - How to date the ...

How to date the Seniors Over 50: Seniors and Baby boomers Online Dating Guide

Seniors and Baby boomers Online Dating Guide



Online dating is a kind of tide.
Now Online dating is not just for young people any more. Thousands of older singles are reaching out for new ways to meet up and start a new life together. Matchmaking websites report significant increases in senior dating, specifically among those ages 50 to 65.
If you?re older than 45 and looking for love online, senior dating on the Internet can be a great way to find Romantic love. Over 45 is a very romantic time in your life. People generally become more romantic as they get older as they learn to savour the finer things in life.?But, Just as you take steps to ensure your in-person dating experience is the best it can be, you should also follow a few guidelines for online dating.

Tip 1: Know what you want
Online dating is different from traditional dating in many ways. In the old days, you might meet someone interesting at a social event, church group, a bar or even at work. Perhaps the person?s looks or laugh would attract you, and you?d make that initial connection in person.
When dating online, you need to be very clear on what you?re looking for. Because online dating site databases have thousands of members. You?ll have to search through databases of other people, just like you, are looking for love. Narrow your search by deciding in advance what kind of relationship you want (friendship, romance, long-term), the age range you?re comfortable with, whether you?re OK meeting someone who has kids, what interests you would like the person to share, and whether religion or politics will matter to you.
Make a list of all these important factors before you begin your search, so that you can narrow down your results and have a better chance of meeting someone compatible.
Tip 2: Look in the right places
Google the words ?online dating? and you?ll get about 175 million results. That?s a lot of people looking to make a connection. Narrow your search for love by sticking with sites that cater to your age group and interests. I recommend a dating site----- http://www.50romance.com/ , a website for baby boomers and seniors, attracts online daters in the 50-plus age range. Each of these members are true. Background services have a professional team, to assist you in finding that someone special, from casual daters to serious singles.
By searching on sites frequented by people in your age range, and that share your interests, you?re more likely to find compatible people for friendship and dating.
Tip 3: Be honest, but not too open
Age is just a number. It?s never too late to fall in love. Honesty is the foundation of any good relationship, and it?s important to be yourself when dating online. Be honest about your age, lifestyle, interests and what type of relationship you seek.
When making new connections, proceed with caution. Don?t put too much personal, identifying information in your user profile. While the majority of online daters have good intentions, identity thieves have been known to approach potential victims online.
Tip 4: Take care
When you meet your love online, start out slowly and get to know each other through email and instant messages before you arrange a phone call. Never agree to meet someone you?ve met online until you?ve gotten to know each other a little bit first. And when you do arrange that exciting first date, make sure a friend or family member knows where you will be, who you?ll be with and when you expect to be back from your date.
In this age of information, online dating have been integrated into the people in the life. More seniors and baby boomers than ever are discovering love online. With the right preparations and precautions, you can help ensure you make some great connections on the information superhighway.

Source: http://50romance.blogspot.com/2012/11/seniors-and-baby-boomers-online-dating.html

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Cell Phones Can Be Addictive | UA Magazine

cell, mobile, phone, message, addiction, consumption, materialist, impulsiveAre you addicted?to your cell phone??That depends on how impulsive and materialistic you are.?American researchers James Roberts and Stephen Pirog suggest mobile phones are more than just communication tools. Their study shows?phones are?actually yet another form of consumption.

Roberts and Pirog?quote different?earlier studies, pointing out that cell phones?can be status symbols or even extensions of ?the self? and that average?young adults on a?typical day check their cell 60 times and send 109.5 text messages.

To better look at mobile phones as consumption tools,?Roberts and Pirog asked 191 business students to complete a questionnaire about cell phone use, materialism and impulsiveness.??The students?for example answered?how extravagant or easily tempted they were and how much they liked owning luxurious things.

With the results Roberts and Pirog were able to show that?the level of?materialism and impulsiveness of a person can actually predict his or her?mobile phone use and instant messaging use. The more materialistic and impulsive, the more likely to?use the cell phone extensively.

It?s?of course?not just the phone, but its functions that can be addictive, Roberts and Pirog explain.??These and other?technological devices can be another way for consumers to cope with the exigencies of life and self-esteem struggles.?

Source: Zeenews
Photo: Flickr, Bikerock

Roberts, J., & Pirog, S. (2012). A preliminary investigation of materialism and impulsiveness as predictors of technological addictions among young adults Journal of Behavioral Addictions, 1 (-1), 1-7 DOI: 10.1556/JBA.1.2012.011

Source: http://www.united-academics.org/magazine/30037/addicted-to-your-cellphone/

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Fish Oil Benefits: The Supplement That Will Keep ... - Women's Health

Is the fountain of youth actually a nutritional supplement? Researchers at Ohio State University think so.

They found that taking omega-3 supplements (a.k.a. fish oil) can help slow the body?s aging process by lengthening telomeres that often shorten with age. Telomeres are small DNA segments in white blood cells that shorten over time as the result of aging. They act like caps at the ends of chromosomes, so if they shorten, the DNA can unravel. That?s major bad news for your cells.

Another recent publication from this study showed that omega-3 supplements lowered inflammation levels in the same subjects. Researchers believe that the less inflammation, the better for the preservation of telomeres.

This one-two punch of lengthened telomeres and reduced inflammation could potentially decrease the risk for other major diseases associated with aging like heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, arthritis, and Alzheimer?s disease, study authors say. Plus, Omega-3 supplementation reduced oxidative stress, caused by excessive free radicals in the blood, by about 15 percent compared to effects seen in the placebo group.

So, while omega-3s won?t prevent wrinkles or other physical signs of aging, they could help you live a longer, happier life.

How Much Do You Need?
It?s best to get nutrients from whole food sources first, but if you don?t eat at least two 3.5-ounce servings of fatty fish per week, then it?s a good idea to take a fish oil supplement.

In this study, participants took either a placebo or a supplement containing 2.5 grams or 1.25 grams of active omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids with 7 to 1 ratio of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) to docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) for four months. Just be sure to take less than 3 grams a day since fish oil can thin your blood.

Foods Rich in Omega-3s
Want to eat your way young? There are plenty of options. Fish is the most well-known source, but here are a few others.

Fatty Fish
? Salmon
? Tuna
? Sardines
? Mackerel
? Anchovies
? Herring
Nut and Plant Oils
? Walnut oil
? Canola Oil
? Soybean Oil
Nuts and Seeds
? Flaxseeds
? Chia seeds
? Walnuts
? Pecans
? Pine nuts

Source: http://www.womenshealthmag.com/health/fish-oil-benefits

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

University of Glasgow and Clyde Space set to put brakes on space junk problem

Engineers at the University of Glasgow and Clyde Space Ltd have developed a practical solution to the increasing problem of space debris. Millions of pieces of 'space junk' are orbiting the Earth as a side-effect of human exploration and exploitation of space.

The pieces range from tiny fragments of bigger objects such as rocket boosters to full-sized pieces of now-defunct equipment. Working satellites and spacecraft can be damaged by collisions with debris, which can travel at velocities of several kilometres per second.

The problem is compounded by every collision which creates more debris in turn; in 2009, the collision of a non-operational Russian communications satellite and a working US satellite created more than 700 pieces of debris.Dr Patrick Harkness of the University's School of Engineering has led the development of the Aerodynamic End Of Life Deorbit System, or AEOLDOS, to help ensure that objects sent into space in future can be removed from orbit at the end of their operational cycle. AEOLDOS is lightweight, foldable 'aerobrake' which can be added to small satellites known as CubeSats before they are launched into low Earth orbit.

Once the satellite has reached the end of its operational life the lightweight aerobrake, made from a thin membrane supported by tape measure-like struts, springs open to generate aerodynamic drag against the extremely thin upper atmosphere that still exists in near-Earth space.

As the satellite falls out of orbit the aerodynamic effects increase, causing the satellite to harmlessly burn up during its descent.

This ensures that it does not become another piece of potentially harmful space debris.Glasgow-based SME Clyde Space, which builds small and micro spacecraft systems, is working with Dr Harkness to apply AEOLDOS technology to the CubeSats it provides to customers all over the world. CubeSats are used for space-related research projects and generally sent into space as secondary payloads on larger launch vehicles.

Dr Harkness said: "It's only been 55 years since Sputnik, the first man-made satellite, was sent into orbit, but since then we've managed to make made quite a mess of the space around our planet. The rate at which we're putting objects into orbit is accelerating each year, which is why it's vital for us to take more control over how they can be removed from orbit once they have served their purpose.

CubeSats are currently aimed at lower orbits than is necessarily desired to ensure they will re-enter the Earth's atmosphere within 25 years in order to meet official recommendations set by the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs.

This can curtail the full scientific potential of CubeSats, but AEOLDOS gives users much more control over the end of their project's life and could enable missions to take place at much higher altitudes because they know we can always produce the drag they will need to dispose of the spacecraft in time."

The tape measure deployment system has been developed by Malcolm McRobb, also from the School of Engineering. Coiling the tapes stores energy within them, which can be released years later to deploy the membrane. Mr. McRobb believes that AEOLDOS has applications beyond space debris control.

He explained: "The technology could be used to enable solar sailing missions, where spacecraft can manoeuvre using the pressure of sunlight.

Or it could form the basis of deployable antennae, increasing the sensitivity of small, low-powered spacecraft.We expect that another year to 18 months of development will see the AEOLDOS system available for commercial use through our licensing agreement with Clyde Space.

After we have demonstrated that the technology can work in space, we are looking forward to designing these new and exciting applications for the device."

Craig Clark of Clyde Space said: 'Clyde Space is widely recognized for developing key technologies and products that enable more advanced CubeSat missions, and AEOLDOS is another key innovation that will enable more spacecraft missions in the future.

The team at the University of Glasgow have been able to solve critical problems relating to the drag sail deployment with effective, innovative solutions and we're sure that this development will be used on many small satellite missions in the future as we aim to reduce the problem of space junk for the next generation of space users.'

The development of the AEOLDOS project is part of the University of Glasgow's Space Glasgow Research Cluster, which draws together researchers from across the College of Science and Engineering to work on pioneering space-related projects.

See the video of AEOLDOS here.

Source: http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/University_of_Glasgow_and_Clyde_Space_set_to_put_brakes_on_space_junk_problem_999.html

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Charged exec cooperating in W.Va. mine blast probe (Providence Journal)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/266935934?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Egypt's OCI reports 31 pct drop in Q3 net income

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's Orascom Construction Industries reported a 31 percent drop in net income for the third quarter, citing a seasonal slowdown in the construction group's work, and said provisioning on several projects hit margins.

Egypt's biggest listed company, which is working with the regulator to split its construction and fertiliser businesses, said on Wednesday net income was $126.8 million.

That was near the top end of analyst forecasts and above the consensus of $119.7 million.

The company said the construction group reported a 4.3 percent fall in its backlog over the previous quarter. The backlog at the end of the third quarter stood at $5.64 billion.

"The group is increasing its focus on the United States' infrastructure programme and petrochemical construction market, in addition to expanding its presence and work in Saudi Arabia and Iraq," it said in a statement.

"We continue to expect strong demand for our fertiliser products supported by strong fundamentals. Farmers in the United States have witnessed record income despite the fall in yields," it added.

OCI said revenues in the quarter rose 1 percent to $1.37 billion compared to a year ago, in line with consensus.

Consolidated earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell 19 percent to $300.6 million, missing the consensus forecast of $311.7 million.

The firm said natural gas supply to its two plants in Egypt witnessed drastic supply cuts in November arising from unscheduled stoppages in the gas grid for maintenance works.

"The natural gas supply shortfalls will have an impact on our fourth quarter production utilisation rates and results," it said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-oci-reports-31-pct-drop-q3-net-073817117--finance.html

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Cuomo likens Katrina, Sandy as damage total soars

FILE - This Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 aerial file photo shows the Breezy Point neighborhood, in New York, where more than 50 homes were burned to the ground as a result of Superstorm Sandy. Sandy ran up a $42 billion bill on New York and the state and New York City are making big requests for disaster aid from the federal government, according to one of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration officials. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

FILE - This Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 aerial file photo shows the Breezy Point neighborhood, in New York, where more than 50 homes were burned to the ground as a result of Superstorm Sandy. Sandy ran up a $42 billion bill on New York and the state and New York City are making big requests for disaster aid from the federal government, according to one of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration officials. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012 file photo, Robert Connolly, left, embraces his wife, Laura, as their son Kyle leans over, at right, as they survey the remains of the home owned by Laura's parents that burned to the ground in the Breezy Point section of New York, following Superstorm Sandy. Sandy ran up a $42 billion bill on New York and the state and New York City are making big requests for disaster aid from the federal government, according to one of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration officials. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

FILE - In this Monday, Nov. 19, 2012 file photo, utility workers walk past a badly damaged house in the Belle Harbor neighborhood of the Rockaways, in New York. The house is one of 200 homes that has been designated unsafe by the New York City Department of Buildings because of damage from Superstorm Sandy. Sandy ran up a $42 billion bill on New York and the state and New York City are making big requests for disaster aid from the federal government, according to one of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration officials. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) ? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo declared Superstorm Sandy in some ways worse than 2005's Hurricane Katrina as he said his state would need $42 billion to recover from the damage wreaked in late October and prevent future catastrophe.

The figure includes more than $32 billion for damage and restoration and an additional $9 billion to head off damage in future storms, including steps to protect the power grid and cellphone network.

As he and other political leaders in his state conferred on how much federal aid to seek, he said New York taxpayers can't foot the bill.

"It would incapacitate the state," he said at a news conference Monday. "Tax increases are always a last, last, last resort."

Comparisons of Sandy to Katrina, which swamped New Orleans and the Gulf Coast in 2005, put the East Coast's recovery "in focus," he declared, saying Sandy hit a more densely populated region and caused more costly damage than Katrina.

Katrina killed more than 1,800 people, flooded nearly the entire city of New Orleans and caused some $108 billion in damage. Sandy killed more than 100 as it swamped coastal areas, toppled trees and dumped snow inland, and the most recent estimates indicate damage totaling more than $62 billion in several Eastern states, with New York and New Jersey accounting for the lion's share.

Previous estimates, which often fluctuated, had put Sandy's damage at around $50 billion. That already made it the second most destructive U.S. storm in history, after Katrina.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who announced Monday that he couldn't abandon the state during its recovery and would seek re-election next year, has put the preliminary damage estimate in his state at $29.5 billion.

"It would be wrong for me to leave now," said Christie, a Republican who controversially lauded President Barack Obama for his attentiveness after the storm. "I don't want to leave now. We have a job to do. That job won't be finished by next year."

States typically get 75 percent reimbursement for the cost of governments to restore mass transit and other services after a disaster. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has paid out nearly $248 million already in New Jersey.

In New York, Cuomo, a Democrat, met with his state's congressional delegation to discuss the new figures and present "less than a wish list." The delegation, Cuomo and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg will now draw up a request for federal disaster aid.

Bloomberg had announced earlier in the day that Sandy caused $19 billion in losses in New York City ? part of the $32 billion estimate Cuomo used.

Most basic recovery costs for roads, water systems, schools, parks, individual assistance and more total $15 billion in New York City; $7 billion for state agencies; $6.6 billion in Nassau County and $1.7 billion in Suffolk County, both on suburban Long Island; and $527 million in Westchester County and $143 million in Rockland County, both north of New York City, according to a state document used in the private briefing of the delegation and obtained by The Associated Press.

Hard times were already facing the state and city governments that were staring at deficits of more than $1 billion before Sandy hit in late October. State tax receipts have also missed projections, showing a continued slow recovery from a recession that could hit taxpayers in the governments' budgets this spring. And there's the looming fiscal cliff, the combination of expiring federal tax cuts and major spending cuts that could rattle the economy.

"Make no mistake, this will not be an easy task, particularly given the impending fiscal cliff, and a Congress that has been much less friendly to disaster relief than in the past," said Sen. Charles Schumer, a powerful New York Democrat.

"We will work with the (Obama) administration on supplemental legislation, to be introduced in the upcoming December session of Congress, that will set us on the road to meeting New York's needs," he said. "This will be an effort that lasts not weeks, but many months, and we will not rest until the federal response meets New York's deep and extensive needs."

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz and Meghan Barr in New York City and Angela Delli Santi in Trenton, N.J.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-27-Superstorm%20Sandy/id-e6d1b21a3e894abfb7f78d478f3961c7

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SpaceX founder Musk eyes 'self-sustaining' Mars civilization

In Musk's vision, the ambitious Mars settlement program would start with a pioneering group of fewer than 10 people, who would journey to the Red Planet aboard a huge reusable rocket powered by liquid oxygen and methane.

By Rob Coppinger,?SPACE.com / November 26, 2012

This still from a SpaceX mission concept video shows a Dragon space capsule landing on the surface of Mars. SpaceX's Dragon is a privately built space capsule to carry unmanned payloads, and eventually astronauts, into space.

SpaceX

Enlarge

Elon Musk, the billionaire founder and CEO of the private spaceflight company SpaceX, wants to help establish a Mars colony of up to 80,000 people by ferrying explorers to the Red Planet for perhaps $500,000 a trip.

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In Musk's vision, the ambitious?Mars settlement?program would start with a pioneering group of fewer than 10 people, who would journey to the Red Planet aboard a huge reusable rocket powered by liquid oxygen and methane.

"At?Mars, you can start a self-sustaining civilization and grow it into something really big," Musk told an audience at the Royal Aeronautical Society in London on Friday (Nov. 16). Musk was there to talk about his business plans, and to receive the Society?s gold medal for his contribution to the commercialization of space.

Mars pioneers

Accompanying the founders of the new?Mars colony?would be large amounts of equipment, including machines to produce fertilizer, methane and oxygen from Mars? atmospheric nitrogen and carbon dioxide and the planet's subsurface water ice.

The Red Planet pioneers would also take construction materials to build transparent domes, which when pressurized with Mars? atmospheric CO2 could grow Earth crops in Martian soil. As the Mars colony became more self sufficient, the big rocket would start to transport more people and fewer supplies and equipment. [Future Visions of Human Spaceflight]

Musk?s architecture for this human Mars exploration effort does not employ cyclers, reusable spacecraft that would travel back and forth constantly between the Red Planet and Earth ? at least not at first

"Probably not a Mars cycler; the thing with the cyclers is, you need a lot of them," Musk told SPACE.com. "You have to have propellant to keep things aligned as [Mars and Earth?s] orbits aren?t [always] in the same plane. In the beginning you won?t have cyclers."

Musk also ruled out SpaceX's?Dragon capsule, which the company is developing to ferry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit, as the spacecraft that would land colonists on the Red Planet. When asked by SPACE.com what vehicle would be used, he said, "I think you just land the entire thing."

Asked if the "entire thing" is the huge new?reusable rocket?? which is rumored to bear the acronymic name MCT, short for Mass Cargo Transport or Mars Colony Transport ? Musk said, "Maybe."

Musk has been thinking about what his colonist-carrying spacecraft would need, whatever it ends up being. He reckons the oxygen concentration inside should be 30 to 40 percent, and he envisions using the spacecraft?s liquid water store as a barrier between the Mars pioneers and the sun.

A $500,000 ticket

Musk?s $500,000 ticket price for a Mars trip was derived from what he thinks is affordable.

"The ticket price needs to be low enough that most people in advanced countries, in their mid-forties or something like that, could put together enough money to make the trip," he said, comparing the purchase to buying a house in California. [Photos: The First Space Tourists]

He also estimated that of the eight billion humans that will be living on Earth by the time the colony is possible, perhaps one in 100,000 would be prepared to go. That equates to potentially 80,000 migrants.

Musk figures the colony program ? which he wants to be a collaboration between government and private enterprise ? would end up costing about $36 billion. He arrived at that number by estimating that a colony that costs 0.25 percent or 0.5 percent of a nation?s gross domestic product (GDP) would be considered acceptable.

The United States' GDP in 2010 was $14.5 trillion; 0.25 percent of $14.5 trillion is $36 billion. If all 80,000 colonists paid $500,000 per seat for their Mars trip, $40 billion would be raised.

"Some money has to be spent on establishing a base on Mars. It?s about getting the basic fundamentals in place," Musk said. "That was true of the English colonies [in the Americas]; it took a significant expense to get things started. But once there are regular Mars flights, you can get the cost down to half a million dollars for someone to move to Mars. Then I think there are enough people who would buy that to have it be a reasonable business case."

The big reusable rocket

The fully reusable rocket that Musk wants to take colonists to Mars is an evolution of SpaceX's Falcon 9 booster, which launches Dragon.

"It?s going to be much bigger [than Falcon 9], but I don?t think we?re quite ready to state the payload. We?ll speak about that next year," Musk said, emphasizing that only fully reusable rockets and spacecraft would keep the ticket price for Mars migration as low as $500,000.

SpaceX is already testing what Musk calls a next-generation, reusable Falcon 9 rocket that can take off vertically and land vertically. The prototype,?called Grasshopper, is a Falcon 9 first stage with landing legs.

Grasshoper has made two short flights. The first was on Sept. 21 and reached a height of 6 feet (2 meters); the second test, on Nov. 1, was to a height of 17.7 feet (5.4 m). A planned milestone for the Grasshopper project is to reach an altitude of 100 feet (30 m). [Grasshopper Rocket's 2-Story Test Flight (Video)]

"Over the next few months, we?ll gradually increase the altitude and speed," Musk said. "I do think there probably will be some craters along the way; we?ll be very lucky if there are no craters. Vertical landing is an extremely important breakthrough ? extreme, rapid reusability. It?s as close to aircraft-like dispatch capability as one can achieve."

Musk wants to have a reusable Falcon 9 first stage, which uses Grasshopper technology, come back from orbit in "the next year or two." He then wants to use this vertical-landing technology for Falcon 9?s upper stage.

Musk hopes to have a fully reusable version of Falcon 9 in five or six years, but he acknowledged that those could be "famous last words."

A rocket stepping stone

Another?stepping stone toward the planned reusable Mars rocket is SpaceX?s?Falcon Heavy launcher. With a first flight planned for next year from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, the Heavy is a Falcon 9 that has two Falcon 9 first stages bolted on either side.

Musk expects the Falcon Heavy to launch from Florida's Cape Canaveral eventually. This triple-first-stage rocket will be able to put 116,600 pounds (53,000 kilograms) into a 124-mile (200 kilometers) low-Earth orbit. But the Falcon Heavy is still much smaller than Musk?s fully reusable Mars rocket, which will also employ a new engine.

While Musk declines to state what the Mars rocket?s payload capability will be, he does say it will use a new staged combustion cycle engine called Raptor. The cycle involves two steps. Propellant ? the fuel and oxidizer ? is ignited in pre-burners to produce hot high-pressure gases that help pump propellant into the engine?s combustion chamber. The hot gases are then directed into the same chamber to aid in the combustion of the propellants.

Because Raptor is a staged combustion engine ? like the main engines of NASA's now-retired?space shuttle fleet?? it is expected to be far more efficient than the open-cycle Merlin engines used by the Falcon 9.

While the Falcon 9?s engines use liquid oxygen (LOX) and kerosene, Raptor will use LOX and methane. Musk explained that "the energy cost of methane is the lowest, and it has a slight ISP [specific impulse] advantage over kerosene and doesn?t have any of the bad aspects of hydrogen." (Hydrogen is difficult to store at cryogenic temperatures, makes metal brittle and is very flammable.)

Follow SPACE.com on Twitter?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/2hg39TVwXMI/SpaceX-founder-Musk-eyes-self-sustaining-Mars-civilization

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My Methods On Choosing A Gps Device System | LandPark

Posted in 2012/11/26 ? 6:37 PMh.Hena Parks

To start with, why is it that you desire a motorola golf gps watch? What you should examine initially that may help in precisely why we desire a unit is, what is actually your way of living like? Have you been using such things as a map and / or checking on the internet for information frequently? Certainly if you are performing these things you actually might be interested in a good solid GPS. So at this point we understand exactly why we require 1, however what other things should we be thinking about?

Since you may have seen the alternatives currently available in comparison to a few years previously seem to be infinite. Generally speaking as a result of what we have observed is generally there seem to be 3 choices and these are, mobile, fixed and the wrist variety. Knowing your own spending limit is also a must after deciding on a type since the choices are so large and wide-ranging so that is definitely our next step inside this process.

I will not directly link to the files, because they are copy-written. This video is strictly for the purpose of installing backed-up map files or custom map files. I DO NOT CONDONE PIRACY. if you are looking for 2012 map files because your backup was damaged, i would search thepiratebay.se the mac doesn?t seem to completely delete the? old map file off the device Garmin 1300, 1350 and 1490 users!! The ?gmapprom.img? file is no longer in the root directory of your? gps. Garmin does this on purpose so that you don?t get yo maps for free! Here?s the secret location of the gmapprom: There is a hidden folder on your device called ?.SYSTEM? ? its so hidden that even if you?ve got ?view hidden folders? enabled, you still won?t be able to see it. You can get to that folder using your address bar: ?H:.System? (replace H with your drive letter)

Exactly like I mentioned within the past paragraph, these products come in all shapes and sizes so that is yet another aspect to look at after we understand each of our financial budgets. Perhaps some thing small just like the watch type is perfect for you because it is so hassle-free and easy to take away with you. I know I prefer to grip things within my hand, so a unit about the size of a mobile phone works for this. Or are you interested in a unit that you quite simply permanently install in your automobile or perhaps bicycle, only to be detached to switch or re-charge the actual battery packs? As soon as we narrow down these options we are going to look for the best system for us so performing these suggestions first is useful for us all.

Other factors to think about immediately after figuring out your finances and just what type you would be needing is the additional features of the devices. Things such as screen size and the quality of the picture are two of the top items I look out for in my feature list. Next, I think about the manufacturer and of course if they supply regular map revisions or if they want to charge for those revisions. Various other assorted features to take a peek into are: Memory, Does it remember travel times if you enjoy biking? Have you considered lap times?

An exciting new function in some places is actually these products can show you traffic. Throughout Europe now this is quite common. If you ask me I have found this option to be very helpful and has kept me from sitting in traffic for many hours on the insane freeway.

Some sort of hands-free model is the next thing we would consider investigating. Considering the towns and cities and the brand-new distracted driving laws and regulations this really is very useful for a unit. Buying a model with this particular hands-free feature could be of substantial significance as well because merely 1 ticket for this particular violation is a lot more then the actual price of this feature.

I hope these pointers we have here do help in the difficult personal choice of choosing a handheld gps garmin etrex for your car or truck or perhaps your mountain bike trips. Mind-boggling is not a expression we want to use in searching for an ideal Handheld GPS unit for this reason we have produced this article according to our own previous experiences in buying systems for our car together with our own bicycles. Soon after finding your way through every one of these simple actions the final result we?d like for here is that you really get a product which offers everything you need for a number of years.

Hunting For A Gps Device ? Ways To Choose One

Tags: GPS watch, secret location, Technology Internet

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Source: http://www.parklandinn.com/communications/gps/my-methods-on-choosing-a-gps-device-system

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jaimes Site - What do You Imply by Internet Hosting - Saunders ...

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Source: http://kolmiwaklam.blogspot.com/2012/11/jaimes-site-what-do-you-imply-by.html

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

World stocks muted ahead of meeting on Greece

BANGKOK (AP) ? Asian stock markets rose modestly Monday after the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season in the U.S. topped expectations. But trading in Europe was subdued hours before finance ministers gathered yet again to discuss what to do about Greece.

The ministers of the 17 countries that use the euro are scheduled to meet in Brussels to try to reach an agreement on conditions that Greece must meet before the next installment of its emergency bailout loan can be disbursed. Athens faces bankruptcy without the cash.

In early European trading, Britain's FTSE 100 fell 0.1 percent to 5,812.32. Germany's DAX was 0.1 percent down at 7,301.64. France's CAC-40 lost 0.3 percent to 3,519.75.

Wall Street, gearing up for its first full day of trading since last Wednesday, was set to fall. Dow Jones industrial futures lost 0.2 percent at 12,937 and S&P 500 futures shed 0.3 percent to 1,401.50. U.S. stocks rose on Friday after a half-day of trading.

Stocks in Asia fared better, posting some modest gains after what appeared to be a successful start to the traditional pre-Christmas U.S. shopping season.

Americans visited stores and websites in record numbers last Friday, the day after the Thanksgiving holiday that is dubbed "Black Friday" because U.S. retailers traditionally turn a profit as millions of Americans rush out to stores in search of gifts for Christmas and other celebrations.

Surveys showed a record 247 million shoppers visited stores and websites between Thursday and Sunday, up 9.2 percent from the year before.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 0.2 percent to 9,388.94 while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 added 0.3 percent to 4,424.20. Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan, Indonesia, India and the Philippines also rose.

But South Korea's Kospi shed 0.2 percent to 1,908.15. Hong Kong's Hang Seng was sapped of momentum by lethargic mainland Chinese markets. The index lost 0.3 percent to 21,857.77. The Shanghai Composite Index was down 0.5 percent to 2,017.46. The smaller Shenzhen Composite Index lost 1.4 percent to 789.49.

Francis Lun, managing director of Lyncean Holdings in Hong Kong, said traders were shying away from mainland stock markets due to the failure of Chinese authorities to remove companies that fail to earn profits after three years.

A regulation exists to allow for a delisting after three years, but it is not enforced, Lun said.

"If you cannot weed out the losers, the stock market will be inundated with companies not doing anything," he said. "The listed companies are out to grab money instead of earning a profit for shareholders."

Among individual stocks, Japanese vehicle makers posted solid gains. Toyota Motor Corp. rose 1.7 percent. Nissan Motor Co. added 2.3 percent. Yamaha Motor Co. gained 2.1 percent.

Australia's Sydney Airport rose 1.5 percent after announcing it has secured about $1.1 billion in new funds to repay existing debts and fund future spending.

Benchmark crude for January delivery was down 9 cents to $88.18 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 90 cents to finish at $88.28 per barrel on Friday.

In currencies, the euro fell to $1.2957 from $1.2971 late Friday in New York. The dollar fell to 82.01 yen from 82.40 yen. Earlier Monday, the dollar rose to 82.59 yen.

___

Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/world-stocks-muted-ahead-meeting-greece-091417431--finance.html

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Web access battles brew before UN conference

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) ? An upcoming U.N. gathering about Internet oversight is raising alarms from a broad coalition of critics, including the U.S., tech giants such as Google and rights groups, concerned that changes could lead to greater efforts to censor Web content and stifle innovation in cyberspace.

Among the issues on the agenda at next month's meeting in Dubai are ideas to battle Internet spam and fraud. But also tucked into more than 1,300 proposals are potential hot-button items that opponents believe could be used by in places such as Iran and China to justify their crackdowns on bloggers and other Web restrictions.

Another likely battle when the meeting begins Dec. 3 is over European-backed suggestions to change the pay structure of the Web to force content providers ? such as Google Inc., Facebook Inc. and others ? to kick in an extra fee to reach users across borders.

It's unclear what proposals will emerge from the 11-day meeting of the U.N.'s 193-nation International Telecommunications Union, or ITU. The preliminary jockeying highlights the tensions of the Internet age between what to regulate and what to leave alone. The outcome could affect billions of Internet users.

Some are unhappy with the structure of the conference itself.

"Engineers, companies and people that build and use the Web have no vote," said Google in an online statement. "The billions of people around the globe that use the Internet, the experts that build and maintain it, should be included" in the decision-making process.

Others warn of dangers.

Simply opening the door to greater controls by the ITU raises concern among activists and others. They worry that countries with tightly controlled cyberspace such as China, Iran and Gulf Arab states will push for additions to the ITU's treaty ? such as national security monitoring ? that could be used to give legitimacy both to their current efforts to monitor and restrict the Web and to possible future clampdowns.

"We can expect an Internet totally different to today's open and global system," said Sharan Burrow, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, representing 175 million workers worldwide.

"Repressive governments will have a U.N. treaty which allows them to control freedom of expression, to monitor everything any targeted individual is saying on the Net, and to stop social movements and human rights defenders demanding respect for basic rights," she cautioned.

The host United Arab Emirates, for example, sharply tightened Internet laws this month to give authorities wide powers to bring charges for offenses such as insulting the rulers or trying to organize street protests.

The ITU's secretary-general, Hamadoun Toure, said in a May speech in Canada that he expected "a light-touch regulatory approach to emerge."

The ITU says it has no interest in governing the Internet or restricting expression, but notes that it must update its communications treaty to incorporate the dramatic technological changes that have occurred since the last revisions in 1988. That was before the Internet in the public domain.

Among the topics to be discussed in Dubai: Internet security, combating fraud, preventing mobile phone "bill shock" with roaming charges and efforts to expand broadband infrastructures in developing countries.

"For every proposal, there is a counterproposal," said ITU spokeswoman Sarah Parkes.

She noted that U.N. treaties such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights take precedence over any regulations ITU may adopt that could relate to freedom of expression.

"We will not support any effort to broaden the scope of the ITRs (International Telecommunications Regulations) to facilitate any censorship of content or blocking the free flow of information and ideas," said Terry Kramer, a former technology industry executive who was given ambassador status to lead a powerhouse 123-member U.S. delegation to the World Conference on International Telecommunications.

The groups include representatives from Facebook, Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com Inc. and Google ? which has been leading an aggressive online campaign to warn about the risks of increased Internet regulations from the meeting.

The international Internet Society, a group headquartered in Virginia and Switzerland that maintains the Internet core protocols, also claims any tighter U.N. controls could "interfere with the continued innovation and evolution of the telecommunications networks and the Internet."

The American technology company envoys in Dubai also are expected to push back strongly against any sweeping revision in Internet charges. The proposal, led by the European Telecommunications Network Operators' Association, would do away with the current system ? called "net neutrality" ? that now treats all Internet traffic equally, regardless of who is sending or receiving.

In its place, the European plan seeks to have content providers pay when their service is accessed across borders. The money raised, theoretically, could pay to expand broadband infrastructures in developing countries. Opponents, however, say companies such as Facebook could cut off access to countries where the extra charges are too burdensome.

Even the U.N.'s cultural agency, UNESCO, has raised concerns about proposals that are so broadly worded that they could be used to restrict freedom of expression under the guise of national security or fighting spam and Internet fraud.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/access-battles-brew-un-conference-060213296.html

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30 Years of Breast Screening: 1.3 Million Wrongly Treated | Pakalert ...

Sayer Ji

The breast cancer industry?s holy grail (that mammography is the primary weapon in the war against breast cancer) has been disproved. In fact, mammography appears to have CREATED 1.3 million cases of breast cancer in the U.S. population that were not there.

A disturbing new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine is bringing mainstream attention to the possibility that mammography has caused far more harm than good in the millions of women who have employed it over the past 30 years as their primary strategy in the fight against breast cancer.[i]

Titled ?Effect of Three Decades of Screening Mammography on Breast-Cancer Incidence,? researchers estimated that among women younger than 40 years of age, breast cancer was overdiagnosed, i.e. ?tumors were detected on screening that would never have led to clinical symptoms,? in 1.3 million U.S. women over the past 30 years. In 2008, alone, ?breast cancer was overdiagnosed in more than 70,000 women; this accounted for 31% of all breast cancers diagnosed.?

As we revealed in a previous article,[ii] the primary form of mammography-detected breast cancer is ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), also known as ?stage zero? or ?non-invasive breast cancer.? Unlike truly invasive cancer, which expands outward like the crab after which it was named (Greek:? Cancer = Crab), ductal carcinoma is in situ, i.e. situated, non-moving ? an obvious contradiction in terms.

Also, DCIS presents without symptoms in the majority of women within which it is detected, and if left untreated will (usually) not progress to cause harm to women. Indeed, without x-ray diagnostic technologies, many if not most of the women diagnosed with it would never have known they had it in the first place. The journal Lancet Oncology, in fact, published a cohort study last year finding that even clinically verified ?invasive? cancers appear to regress with time if left untreated:

[We] believe many invasive breast cancers detected by repeated mammography screening do not persist to be detected by screening at the end of 6 years, suggesting that the natural course of many of the screen-detected invasive breast cancers is to spontaneously regress.[iii]

The new study authors point out ?The introduction of screening mammography in the United States has been associated with a doubling in the number of cases of early-stage breast cancer that are detected each year.? And yet, they noted, only 6.5% of these early-stage breast cancer cases were expected to progress to advanced disease. DCIS and related ?abnormal breast findings,? in other words, may represent natural, benign variations in breast morphology. Preemptive treatment strategies, however, are still employed today as the standard of care, with mastectomy rates actually increasing since 2004.[iv]

The adverse health effects associated with overdiagnosis and overtreatment with lumpectomy, radiation, chemotherapy and hormone-suppressive treatments cannot be underestimated, especially when one considers the profound psychological trauma that follows each stage of diagnosis and treatment, and the additional physiological burdens such psychic injuries lead to, including up-regulation of multidrug resistance genes within cancer as a result of the increased adrenaline associated with the ?flight-or-fight? stress response.[v]

Also, it is now coming to light that chemotherapy and radiation actually increase the proportion of the highly malignant cancer stem cells to the relatively non-malignant daughter cells within the tumor colony. Much in the same way that conventional antibiotic agents will drive multidrug resistance within the subpopulation of surviving post-antibiotic bacteria, ensuring recurrence, conventional treatments also drive the surviving stem-cell enriched tumor populations into greater resistance and metastatic potential when it does inevitably recur. Or worse, radiation therapy may actually increase the ?stemness? of breast cancer cells making them 30 times more malignant (capable of forming new tumors).

If it is indeed true that DCIS, other abnormal breast findings, as well as clinically confirmed invasive breast cancer, either remain benign or regress when left untreated, the entire breast cancer industry, which is already deeply mired in cause-marketing conflicts of interest, must radically reform itself, or face massive financial and ethical liabilities vis-?-vis outdated and no longer ?evidence-based? practices.

Another serious problem with mammography (and there are dozens of them) not addressed in this latest research finding concerns the unique carcinogenicity of the x-rays the technology employs. We now know that the 30 kVp radiation, colloquially known as ?low energy? x-rays, are between 300-400% more carcinogenic than the ?higher energy? radiation given off by atomic bomb blasts (200 kVp or higher).[vi]? Present day radiation risk models used to assess the known breast cancer risk associated with mammography against the purported benefits do not take into this profound discrepancy. In fact, these models were developed before DNA was even discovered.

Also, considering that breast cancer susceptibility genes, BRCA1/BRCA2, interfere with the DNA self-repair mechanisms needed to reduce the carcinogenicity associated with radiation exposure within those who carry these genetic variations, the harms associated with mammography may be exponentially higher than the conventional medical community presently understands and communicates to their patients.? Indeed, it is likely that x-ray based mammography screenings have been planting the seeds of future radiation-induced breast cancer within exposed populations.

With top-tier biomedical journals now publishing research diametrically opposed to the policies and recommendations of both governmental, non-governmental and industry-sponsored health organizations, the time is ripe for us to critically evaluate conventional medicine?s conventional standard of care and to educate ourselves further to the true causes of cancer, and how to go about preventing and/or removing them.

For more alternative information on breast cancer, and related women?s health issues, visit our health guides on GreenMedInfo.com.

Also, view the free webinar titled ?The Problem with Pink? hosted by the co-authors of Cancer Killers: The Cause is the Cure below:

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This article first appeared at Greenmedinfo.

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Source: http://www.pakalertpress.com/2012/11/25/30-years-of-breast-screening-1-3-million-wrongly-treated/

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Peanut Oil Arthritis Treatment For Those Achy Knees

In today?s post I?ve got a quick tip for anyone who?s dealing with knee pain. While knee pain could be the result of an injury or strain to the tendons and ligaments of the knee joint, another possible culprit could be high levels of inflammation.

If you have swelling and/or sharp pain with movement, consult with a specialist. However, if you suspect the knee pain is a result of arthritis, there is an old school remedy that may be worth trying.

Applying cold pressed peanut oil to the knees. Peanut oil, are you kidding me? Nope, there?s good reason why there may be some truth to this home remedy.

More after the jump?

Cold pressed peanut oil is high in plant sterols and antioxidants. When applied directly to the skin, the oil can be absorbed through the skin and may result in a reduction of inflammation and pain.

While the mechanisms of peanut oil reducing inflammation are unclear, many individuals swear by this treatment as a way to provide arthritis relief.

My hunch is there?s something about the properties of peanut oil that works at the cellular level to reduce inflammation.

You can find cold pressed peanut oil at most health food stores. Simply apply some oil to your hands and rub in vigorously to the knee joint and surrounding musculature a couple times per day.

Consuming peanut oil internally doesn?t seem to have the same effect so I?d avoid that route.

Obviously I can?t provide you with a guarantee this will work, but it?s certainly worth experimenting with.

Arthritis is a condition that?s directly related to inflammation in the body. From a dietary perspective you?re best served to increase your consumption of alkaline foods like fruits, vegetables, raw almonds, etc.

Cut out the sodas, processed foods, sugars, and refined sweets. A Primal Blueprint type diet has worked well for many of my Charleston personal training clients who suffered from arthritis symptoms.

While there?s no magic bullet solution for the treatment of achy joints, I?d suggest taking an ?inside-out? approach for bringing relief. Focus on your diet first then look at natural remedies before running to your doctor for a prescription.

If anyone has found arthritis relief from using cold pressed peanut oil, I?d love to hear from you. Feel free to leave your comments below.

Shane Doll is a certified Charleston personal trainer, fat loss expert, speaker, and founder of Shaping Concepts Personal Training Studios. He specializes in helping people achieve a body transformation with burst training exercise and whole food nutrition. You can receive a FREE no-obligations trial of his Charleston personal fitness programs and start experiencing the Shaping Concepts difference today.


Category: Nutrition.

Source: http://www.shapingconcepts.com/blog/peanut-oil-arthritis-treatment/

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Sunday, November 25, 2012

Susan Rice battles critics as abrasive style takes toll

(Advisory: please note language in paragraph seven)

UNITED NATIONS/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Susan Rice has had a series of diplomatic triumphs as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. President Barack Obama, an old friend, showed he has her back when last week he publicly challenged her Republican critics over the Benghazi controversy to "go after me" rather than her. She knew former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright from the age of 4.

And yet Rice is now fighting for her political future. Her chances of becoming the next secretary of state - replacing Hillary Clinton - have been significantly damaged.

Senior Republicans, such as Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham, have said they will oppose her getting the job, signaling a confirmation battle if Obama decides to nominate her. Some critics in the media, such as Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank, have said she is unsuitable for the position.

The immediate source of a lot of the criticism is her appearances on Sunday morning television shows in September five days after the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens, and three other Americans had been killed in Benghazi.

Her critics bitterly complain that she misled the American public by suggesting that the assault was the result of a spontaneous protest rather than an organized assault by affiliates of al Qaeda. During the U.S. presidential campaign, supporters of Republican candidate Mitt Romney seized on the issue to attack Obama.

The antipathy in Washington and elsewhere, though, is based on more than a series of TV interviews. While U.N. diplomats and U.S. officials who have dealt with Rice praise the intellect of the 48-year-old former Rhodes scholar and graduate of Stanford and Oxford, they say she has won few popularity contests during her meteoric rise.

Diplomats on the 15-nation U.N. Security Council privately complain of Rice's aggressive negotiating tactics, describing her with terms like "undiplomatic" and "sometimes rather rude." They attributed some blunt language to Rice - "this is crap," "let's kill this" or "this is bullshit."

"She's got a sort of a cowboy-ish attitude," one Western diplomat said. "She has a tendency to treat other countries as mere (U.S.) subsidiaries."

Two other diplomats - all three were male - supported this view.

"She's not easy," said David Rothkopf, the top manager and editor-at-large of Foreign Policy magazine. "I'm not sure I'd want to take her on a picnic with my family, but if the president wants her to be secretary of state, she'll work hard."

Indeed, along with a "no-nonsense" style, Rice has the most important ingredient for a successful secretary of state - a close relationship with the U.S. president, Rothkopf said.

Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, himself not known for mincing words, publicly admonished Rice after she said Russian calls for an investigation into civilian deaths in Libya caused by NATO were a "bogus" ploy.

"Really this Stanford dictionary of expletives must be replaced by something more Victorian, because certainly this is not the language in which we intend to discuss matters with our partners in the Security Council," said Churkin, mocking Rice's education at Stanford.

More immediately at the United Nations, she faces criticism from human rights activists and some diplomats because of U.S. opposition to public criticism of Rwanda for its role in the worsening conflict in the Congo.

BREAKING HER SILENCE

Rice, who declined to comment for this article, broke her silence on the Benghazi controversy on Wednesday, defending her September statements about the attack.

But she did so on Thanksgiving eve when many Americans were traveling and when her comments were likely to be overshadowed by news of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

"I relied solely and squarely on the information provided to me by the intelligence community," Rice told reporters at the United Nations. "I made clear that the information provided to me was preliminary and that our investigations would give us the definitive answers."

While Rice said some statements about her by McCain were "unfounded," she may have been trying to mend fences when she added: "I look forward to having the opportunity at the appropriate time to discuss all of this with him."

People who know Rice say she is finding it hard to keep up her spirits during a long autumn of criticism. "It's not easy being attacked publicly by people who have their facts wrong day after day," one U.S. official said.

Rice's defenders say that a lot of the attacks smacked of sexism as the same tough manner she can display has been seen as an asset in some legendary male American foreign affairs officials.

Rothkopf, who was an official in President Bill Clinton's administration, cited James Baker and Henry Kissinger as exemplary secretaries of state.

They were "tough infighters who broke a few eggs and made some enemies. They are admired for their toughness, and (Rice) is attacked for her abrasiveness," he said.

SOME SAY EMINENTLY QUALIFIED

Certainly, Rice has won some accolades for pushing the U.N. Security Council to adopt new Iran and North Korea sanctions, helping secure the toughest U.N. measures to date against those two countries over their nuclear programs. Rice also played a key role in negotiating last year's war resolution on Libya.

Current and former U.S. officials aligned with the Obama administration say Rice is eminently qualified for the post of secretary of state.

They say the attacks on her during the presidential campaign were part of Republican efforts to frame the Benghazi assault as a terrorist attack, possibly linked to al Qaeda, on Obama's watch.

"The president has a great record in fighting al Qaeda, so (Republicans) try to find a way of attacking his record on al Qaeda," said Richard Clarke, who was Rice's boss when she worked at the U.S. National Security Council during Bill Clinton's first term.

Rice became an official in the Clinton administration in the 1990s, at the National Security Council and State. Then, under Obama, she became the youngest woman and the first black female to become U.S. ambassador to the U.N.

She grew up close to the levers of power. She is the daughter of the late Emmett Rice, who was a Cornell University economics professor and member of the Federal Reserve Board of governors. Albright, who is a family friend, recommended Rice to become assistant secretary of state.

"We often traveled together and I took her advice very seriously," said Albright, who served as U.N. ambassador from 1993 to 1997 and secretary of state from 1997 to 2001. "I think she is one of the smartest people I know in national security issues."

REPAIRED TIES

While some Republicans have accused her of sacrificing U.S. interests in her effort to woo U.N. diplomats and also complain that she is too often absent during U.N. Security Council votes, neither criticism is given much credibility by other diplomats in New York.

They say Rice, whose husband and children live in Washington and who is a member of Obama's Cabinet, has an advantage as a U.N. negotiator because other nations' delegations know that when she takes a position on an issue, the president is almost certainly behind her.

A U.N. official said that when Rice took office in 2009 as Obama's U.N. envoy, she repaired much damage done to the U.S. image at the United Nations, an organization often criticized by the administration of former President George W. Bush.

"We have paid the price of stiff-arming the U.N. and spurning our international partners," Rice told an audience in 2009. Washington quickly paid up billions of dollars in dues and said it would work with the United Nations whenever possible.

In late 2009 and 2010, Rice led negotiations on a fourth U.N. sanctions resolution against Iran over a nuclear program that Tehran insists is for peaceful electricity generation but Western powers and their allies suspect is for weapons.

Britain and France, which had drafted the three previous U.N. sanctions resolutions on Iran, were reluctant to allow Rice to be the "pen holder" for a fourth, U.N. envoys said, mostly out of fear the Obama administration would offer a weak draft because of its determination to boost engagement with Tehran.

They were wrong. Rice's draft was far tougher than expected.

The Security Council passed it in June 2010 and European diplomats who worked on it acknowledge that it created one of the toughest sanctions regimes in U.N. history.

DUMBSTRUCK

Then came the battle for control of Libya in early 2011. After weeks of discussions within the divided U.S. administration, Obama decided that Washington could support a U.N. Security Council mandate for outside military forces to use "all necessary measures" short of an occupation to protect Libyan civilians from leader Muammar Gaddafi's forces.

The British and French were dumbstruck. Their initial reaction when Rice presented U.S. demands for a Libya resolution was that it was a ploy to get the Russians to veto it.

But then they realized she was serious.

Within 36 hours of the resolution passing on March 17, 2011, "the French were bombing Gaddafi's forces as they prepared to attack Benghazi," said one senior Western diplomat involved in the negotiations. "The Americans pushed the process well beyond what we thought we could achieve in the council, and it succeeded."

Still, it is far from smooth sailing for Rice. Security Council diplomats and human rights activists have more recently criticized her over Rwanda.

Her involvement with the East African nation began in the 1990s, when she was a National Security Council official responsible for international organizations and peacekeeping.

Still reeling from its 1993 failure in Somalia, the United States under Clinton did virtually nothing to stop the Rwanda genocide in 1994.

Nearly two decades later, council diplomats and rights groups accuse Rice of protecting Rwanda and President Paul Kagame, a charge that Rice's defenders say is baseless.

U.N. experts who monitor compliance with sanctions on Congo have accused Kagame's Rwanda of supporting the M23 rebellion in eastern Congo. M23, which is suspected of mass killings, rape and other atrocities, on Tuesday captured the city of Goma.

Rwanda denies supporting M23 but council diplomats and U.N. officials say those denials are hardly credible.

In June the experts sent a report on the allegations to the Security Council's Congo sanctions committee, where council diplomats said Rice blocked its publication for weeks. U.S. officials denied blocking it and said Washington only wanted Kigali to have a chance to respond.

Just on Monday, diplomats told Reuters, the U.S. delegation again insisted that Rwanda not be named in a resolution - which was passed by the council on Tuesday - criticizing M23 rebels' seizure of Goma.

Rice's defenders say she is following instructions from Washington, and the U.S. assessment is that singling out Rwanda for backing M23 would not be constructive. They also deny that she is trying to protect Rwanda or Kagame, calling instead for negotiations between Kigali and Kinshasa.

That doesn't wash with some human rights activists. "Despite its influence on Rwanda, in public the U.S. government has been inexplicably silent," said Philippe Bolopion, U.N. director for Human Rights Watch.

(Reporting By Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Martin Howell and Xavier Briand)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/susan-rice-battles-critics-abrasive-style-takes-toll-051050853.html

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